On Sun, May 20, 2007 at 13:56:16 -0700, Andrew Sackville-West wrote: > On Sun, May 20, 2007 at 08:38:25PM +0200, Matthias Brennwald wrote: > > Dear all > > > > I've got a laptop (Apple PowerBook G4) that I use both at home and on > > the road (with Debian Etch installed). At home, the laptop is connected > > to an external screen, with the laptop closed (so, at home, I don't use > > the laptops own screen). The two screens have different resolutions > > (laptop screen: 1440 x 1024, external screen at home: 1280 x 1024). > > > > The problem is that Debian uses the same screen resolution for both > > screens, wich I find annoying (it uses 1440 x 1024, which means that the > > image is larger than what fits on my external screen). How can I make > > Debain use the appropriate screen size? Do I have to set it manually or > > is there a way to adjust the screen size automatically? > > > > If there is some surefire way to tell which monitor is connected, then > it should be a simple matter to restart X with a script that checks > which monitor you're using and points to the appropriate xorg.conf > (or even changes the file directly (not recommened)).
Something like ddcprobe | egrep 'eisa|serial' will probably give enough information as long as the monitor is DDC capable. ("ddcprobe" is in package "xresprobe") > > If monitor detection is not really possible (I personally wouldn't > know how to do it) then a simple script could be used to change a > symlink to point to the appropriate xorg.conf. then an /etc/init.d/*dm > restart would fix you right up. > > there are many solutions but essentially you have to set up some > situation where you can put different xorg.conf's in place as needed. -- Regards, | http://users.icfo.es/Florian.Kulzer Florian | -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]